Tower Hamlets comes under fire for fostering Christian child, 5, with Muslim family

Politicians in London’s East End are accusing “bigots” of whipping up hysteria over a white Christian child being placed by Tower Hamlets Council into care with a “niqab-wearing foster carer” in a Muslim household.

The five-year-old girl had spent six months in two Muslim households “against the wishes of the girl’s family”, the national media reported at the weekend.

The row follows criticism of the children’s services by the government’s Ofsted watchdog in April over its lack of knowledge about childcare cases.

The Opposition Tory group was shocked at reports of the child being taught Arabic words to be said aloud to ensure “when you die you go to heaven” and that her necklace containing a cross was removed, which they feared suggested proselytising.

“This raises troubling questions about the suitability of some foster parents,” Cllr Andrew Wood told the East London Advertiser today.

Andrew Wood: "Foster families have a duty not to impose their own beliefs on a child." Picture: Mike Brooke

“Foster families have a duty not to impose their own beliefs on a child unless they are the universal principles of good parenting.”

The opposition group was not opposed to Muslim parents fostering children of other faiths, nor vice versa, as child care was “not faith dependent”.

Both opposition groups are calling for an investigation, claiming a confidential report was leaked from inside the Labour administration in “a clear breach of data protection”.

The child was taken into care earlier this year. Her mother was said to have been “horrified” by the cultural, religious and linguistic environment in which her daughter had spent the past six months.

But a town hall spokesman told the Advertiser: “We give absolute consideration to our children’s background and their cultural identity in every case. The child is in fact fostered by an English-speaking family of mixed race in this temporary placement.”

The council could make no further comment on the case for legal reasons.

Failures in children services were found by Ofsted inspectors in April. Too many children remained in “actual or potential harm” because of lack of scrutiny and understanding in private fostering arrangements which failed to consider whether children had been trafficked or abandoned by their parents.

The council is investing an extra £4.8m in children’s services for improvements required by Ofsted.

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